DC Circuit Court to Decide Tuesday Whether Obama Administration Can Rewrite Laws
On Tuesday the a three judge panel on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals will be hearing Halbig v. Sebelius, one of the more important legal challenges to ObamaCare's legally problematic implementation. What the plaintiffs are asking is pretty straightforward - they want the judges to direct the Obama Administration to faithfully execute the plain language of the statute that Congress passed and the president signed.
Via The Wall Street Journal:
The Affordable Care Act—at least the version that passed in 2010—instructed the states to establish insurance exchanges, and if they didn't the Health and Human Services Department was authorized to build federal exchanges. The law says that subsidies will be available only to people who enroll "through an Exchange established by the State." The question in Halbig is whether these taxpayer subsidies can be distributed through the federal exchanges, as the Administration insists.
We need to reign this Kenyan Socialist-in-chief in...aside from the hiding of his actual identity tracing records and the fraudulent elections, he's tearing this country apart with his agenda....
Hopefully there are some active brain cells in this court that aren't behold'n to this regime!
So the people who live in states that refused to set up exchanges will be punished?
ReplyDeleteWe need to reign this Kenyan Socialist-in-chief in...aside from the hiding of his actual identity tracing records and the fraudulent elections, he's tearing this country apart with his agenda....
ReplyDeleteHopefully there are some active brain cells in this court that aren't behold'n to this regime!
9:07 - Our President is a US Citizen by birth, born in the great state of Hawaii.
ReplyDeleteYou may also want to do a little research regarding the definition of Socialist. (Hint: Government regulations do not equal government ownership.)
9:37 - the document produced was dubious at best.....the rest of the documentation requested has been hidden from the public,
ReplyDeleteSorry - nice try on part one....